Friday, June 26, 2009

Day 2: Chama to Ojo Calienta: 94 miles





Well this was a day to dread. Have not done a day like this since Vietnam, and that was totally flat, this was not.

A subtitle for this day would be "simultaneous events and the intervention of mother nature"

Instead of boring you with prose, I'll just set out the good,
the bad, and the ugly (in reverse order).

The ugly
How about a violent wind, hailstorm, and driving rain that left huge puddles of water and threw our bikes 10 ft into the mud from where we had placed them while we went for lunch.

What do you think is the range and velocity of a puddle of water on the road when a semi-trailer drives thru it (and you are biking on a 2 ft shoulder)?

The bad
A lot of ups and downs on a very long day
The last 16 miles is a gradual uphill, into the wind, and with our third rain of the day
A flat tire and the first rain of the day beginning at precisely the same moment
A fair amount of traffic from 7:30 to 8:30 in the morning

The good
My flat tire is only 1 1/2 miles from lunch (after 56 miles of riding) and the rain only lasts 5 minutes
Our support vehicle pulls up one minute later and they help me repair the flat
As I start off at 7 am I see many dear leaping the road, but they don't have good depth or distance perception. One comes silently from behind me and leaps one foot in front of my bike miraculously avoiding death by deer.
The weather is perfect (except for the rain)
The scenery is spectacular (immediately below is Echo Canyon National Park where some of our group stopped for lunch... and thereby missed the hail storm)



The ride is actually only 89 miles (not 94)
We arrive at Ojo Calienta, a delightful unpretentious mineral spa resort with 7 different pools (mud, soda, arsenic, iron, sulfur, etc etc)



The company is great
I feel great after the long ride
We have two nights at this delightful place

A mirage:


Everything is up to date in New Mexico; have you ever seen floor tiles on the side of the road?

(How about rumble strips filled with water from the rain)

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Cumbres and Toltec Railroad, 6/23/09



Today was the first day of a 300 mile bicycle excursion thru the mountains of northern New Mexico. After a lovely, scenic four hour drive thru the central valley of Colorado, thru small one street towns and with mountain ranges of each side we finally arrived in the town of Antonito, one of the hubs of the Cumbres and Toltec narrow gauge railroad (http://www.cumbrestoltec.com/).
We saw the railroad arrive at 4:45 pm steaming, whistling and hooting after hauling three carloads of people up what would be our first days' ride. (see movie below)



Finally at 7:30 am on Wednesday we are off on a 49 mile ride to Chama, NM, over two 10,000 foot passes. The first is a 2400' climb over five miles.






After a long downhill to an abandoned restaurant where we had sandwiches on the porch, we did another 750' climb to the second pass.



This could be one of the most lovely bike rides I have ever done. Rare cars on a road that winds thru lush forest, high above remote wild valleys, at times along the railroad tracks of the narrow gauge, and all the while with the songs of birds cheering us along. The climb was tough, but the scenery helped it to pass without a complaint. The final 16 mile downhill to Chama was a delight.